Deliverables vs Tasks
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Understanding the difference between deliverables and tasks is crucial for effective scope management in Agile projects. A deliverable is a tangible or measurable output produced as a result of project work. It represents something you can hand over to a customer, stakeholder, or end user, such as a report, a working software module, or a training manual. In contrast, a task is a specific action or piece of work that must be completed to produce a deliverable. Tasks are the steps your team takes to create, refine, or complete a deliverable. While deliverables define what the project aims to produce, tasks define how you will get there. Both play essential roles in managing project scope: deliverables clarify what is included in the project's outcome, while tasks help organize and execute the work required to achieve those outcomes.
deliverables_and_tasks.md
Confusing deliverables with tasks can lead to significant scope management problems. If you treat tasks as deliverables, you might focus on tracking activity rather than actual outcomes, making it hard to measure project progress or success. For example, in the online event registration system project above, simply completing implement form validation logic (a task) does not mean the event registration web page (a deliverable) is finished or ready for delivery. Mixing up these concepts can result in incomplete deliverables, unclear expectations, and misalignment with stakeholders about what the project will actually produce. By clearly distinguishing deliverables from tasks, you ensure that your team remains focused on producing the agreed-upon outputs, preventing misunderstandings and reducing the risk of scope creep.
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